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Chapter 8 INDIAN POVERTY

Word Count: 1395    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

al results. Contrast of the Brahmin doctor's home; his little sons. But without

t may be well to ask. It is, undoubtedly, a right general principle that each person's life should be kept as homely and

because he has no change of garments, and in the cold weather because his flimsy dress is no protection; and if he gets a little money he gladly buys a blanket, or a warm coat. He has no lamp in his dwelling because he cannot afford it, and after the early nightfall he has to pass his evening hours sitting in the dark, when there is no moon. In almost all the houses of a country village in western India, and in many of the houses in to

his dhota, and eats with his fingers in silence. Sociality at such a time is out of place; it diverts the mind from the business in hand, which is that of "filling the belly," as the Indian himself commonly exp

d children sit down together, and there is much sociality. The desire to sit on chairs merely as a mark of distinction is a foolish aspiration. Ne

of the bulk of the Indian population are the brass and copper, or earthenware, cooking pots and pans, and the prosperity of the household can be pretty accurately gauged by the quality, number, and condition of these utensils. A few people own besides an ol

ed so to live, because no other manner of life is known to them, there is nothing beautiful about it. Even from a purely physical point of view, it is an unwholesome state of things. The airless, lightless houses are most unsavoury, and in times of sickness and childbirth this is

d of anything which any of his neighbours have attempted. His name means "seven sons." He has already got six, and is hoping for the seventh. These six little sons are dressed in ordinary English boys' dress. They are frequent visitors at the Mission bungalow. It may, of course, be only English p

with a red cloth; there is a bright lamp, a few pictures are on the walls, and the party of cheerful boys are sitting round the table. Some are playing games,

ound. This plant is a good deal venerated by women, and no doubt was provided for the benefit of the ladies of his household. But although it is some gain to have given up i

He was baptized by John." I asked him how he knew all these facts. He replied that he had been educated at a Jesuit school, and that he had learnt them there. I said that, having been brought up under

mum of religious observances, and have no belief at all. Amongst these are men, like the Brahmin doctor, who have imbibed something of the spirit of Christianity from what they have heard and seen, and are distin

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Contents

India and the Indians
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTORY
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 2 INDIAN HOSPITALITY
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 3 THE INDIAN VIEW OF NATURE AND ARCHITECTURE
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 4 INDIAN EMPLOYERS OF LABOUR
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 5 THE INDIAN POSTAL SERVICE
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 6 INDIANS AND ENGLISH CUSTOMS
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 7 INDIAN UNPUNCTUALITY
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 8 INDIAN POVERTY
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 9 INDIAN ART
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India and the Indians
Chapter 10 THE INDIAN VILLAGE
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India and the Indians
Chapter 11 INDIAN ENTERTAINMENTS
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India and the Indians
Chapter 12 THE CONVERSION OF INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 13 MISSION WORK IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 14 INDIAN MUSIC
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India and the Indians
Chapter 15 INDIAN MEALS
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India and the Indians
Chapter 16 HINDU PHILOSOPHY
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India and the Indians
Chapter 17 HINDUS AND RELIGION
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 18 RELIGIOUS PHASES IN INDIA
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 19 GAMES IN INDIA
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 20 INDIAN WRESTLERS
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 21 BOOKS IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 22 INDIAN PAGEANTS
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 23 THE INDIAN CHARACTER
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India and the Indians
Chapter 24 RELIGIOUS CONTROVERSY IN INDIA
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 25 WILD BEASTS IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 26 SOME INDIAN ANIMALS
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India and the Indians
Chapter 27 THE INDIAN WORLD OF NATURE
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India and the Indians
Chapter 28 INSECTS IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 29 THE INDIAN ASCETIC
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India and the Indians
Chapter 30 THE INDIAN WIDOW
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India and the Indians
Chapter 31 WRONGDOING IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 32 PROPERTY IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 33 EAST AND WEST TRAVELLING
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India and the Indians
Chapter 34 CUSTOMS OF EAST AND WEST
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India and the Indians
Chapter 35 SERVANTS IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 36 THE EDUCATED HINDU
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India and the Indians
Chapter 37 UNFINISHED PLANS IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 38 GIFTS IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 39 PROVERBIAL SAYINGS ABOUT INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 40 INDIAN UNREST
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India and the Indians
Chapter 41 THE ENGLISH IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 42 DISHONESTY IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 43 INDIAN MOHAMMEDANS
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India and the Indians
Chapter 44 NIGHT ALARMS IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 45 THE INDIAN WASHERMAN
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India and the Indians
Chapter 46 AGRICULTURE IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 47 EAST AND WEST ON BOARD SHIP
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